Two major developments are reshaping the regulatory landscape for digital assets in the United States, and together they signal a shift that the industry has been waiting years for.
The CLARITY Act Heads to Markup
The Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act is set for an official Senate Banking Committee markup on May 14, marking a major moment for the crypto industry. The bill aims to create clearer federal rules for digital assets by splitting oversight between the SEC and CFTC.
Under the CLARITY Act, the CFTC would take a central role in regulating digital commodities and the intermediaries that trade or custody them. The bill defines digital commodities as blockchain-based assets that are not securities under federal law, giving the CFTC explicit authority over spot markets for those assets.
The bill was introduced by Senators Cynthia Lummis and Tim Scott as a comprehensive framework for digital assets. It passed the House with a commanding 294-134 vote in July 2025, one of the most supportive legislative votes for crypto in US history.
One of the final sticking points has been resolved ahead of the markup. Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks released a compromise text that allows crypto firms to pursue stablecoin reward programs, while prohibiting them from offering yield on stablecoin deposits that functions as the economic equivalent of bank deposit interest.
The White House is reportedly targeting July 4, 2026 as the deadline for signing the legislation into law. Prediction platform Polymarket currently places roughly 76% odds on the CLARITY Act becoming law during 2026.
The implications extend well beyond trading. Clearer rules on what counts as a digital commodity versus a security would make it easier for businesses and consumers to pay with crypto in everyday transactions, without the legal ambiguity that has held institutional adoption back.
A First-of-Its-Kind Fed Chair
Kevin Warsh‘s April 2026 financial disclosure revealed over $100 million in crypto-related investments across more than 20 projects, including stakes in Bitwise Asset Management, Solana, dYdX, Polymarket, and Bitcoin Lightning startup Flashnet, making him the first Fed Chair nominee in history with meaningful crypto exposure.
Warsh has described Bitcoin as an “important asset that can help inform policymakers” when they’re doing things right and wrong.
That said, the market’s reaction to his nomination was not straightforwardly bullish. Warsh is historically a monetary hawk and criticized the Fed’s low-rate stance during the 2021-2022 inflation surge as a “fatal policy error.” He has advocated for a more disciplined Fed with a smaller balance sheet. If confirmed, he will be required to divest nearly all of his private investments and most of his stocks under a signed ethics agreement to avoid conflicts of interest.
The Senate Banking Committee advanced Warsh’s nomination in a 13-11 party-line vote on April 29, the first fully partisan committee vote on a Fed Chair nominee in the Senate Banking Committee’s history. Full Senate confirmation is expected in the week of May 11, before Jerome Powell’s term expires on May 15.
What It Means
Taken together, the CLARITY Act markup and Warsh’s confirmation represent a potential inflection point. Clearer crypto rules could open the door to greater institutional adoption, faster ETF growth, stronger banking integration, and lower legal risks for exchanges and custody firms. The risks remain real, however. The CLARITY Act still faces a full Senate floor vote, reconciliation with the House text, and a persistent banking lobby looking to narrow its scope. And a hawkish Fed Chair with tighter monetary policy could dampen the liquidity conditions that crypto markets tend to thrive in.
Still, for an industry that has operated in regulatory grey areas for over a decade, having both a federal market structure law on the cusp of passage and a crypto-invested central banker at the helm of the Fed is a combination unlike anything seen before.







